Washington, DC — Senate Majority leader Harry Reid announced his appointees to the Super Committee will be Senators John Kerry, Patty Murray and Max Baucus.

Robert Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for America’s Future is critical of Senator Reid’s picks. Borosage said, “Reid apparently has chosen not to appoint Senators Bernie Sanders or Sherrod Brown or Jeff Merkley who have forcefully stood with the majority of Americans who want Medicare and Social Security protected and who favor raising taxes on the rich to help reduce the deficit.”

Borosage called Senator Baucus, the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, a conservative Democrat, but praised his defense of Social Security and Medicare in the past noting that Sen. Baucus has been a consistent supporter of Social Security, playing a key role in blocking President Bush’s attempt to privatize the program. He was on the President’s deficit commission but sensibly voted against the plan put forth by the Co-Chairs which would have cut deeply from Social Security and Medicare.

On the other hand, Borosage said, “Baucus is a leading recipient of contributions from the drug companies and the health insurance industry. He has voted against repealing the tax benefits for companies that ship jobs overseas. He voted for the Bush tax cuts and voted to repeal the estate tax. He is not a champion of sensible health care policy or progressive tax reform.”

Senator Kerry, according to the Washington Post, is supposed to `appease liberals.’ In his 2004 Presidential campaign, he pledged to protect Medicare and Social Security, arguing that we should not balance the budget on the backs of seniors. In recent months, he has spoken forcefully against the Republican efforts to turn Medicare into a voucher program.

But, Borosage said, “Like President Obama, Kerry is fatally attracted to the notion of a grand bargain, sacrificing cuts in Medicare and Social Security in exchange for increased revenues to reduce long term deficits. And he is simply wrong-headed about what the nation must do in order to get the economy on track.”

In a now infamous interview on Meet the Press, Kerry touted the $4 trillion “bigger deal” that Obama and Boehner nearly reached, with “a mix of reductions and reforms in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid but also recognize we needed to do some revenue.” The “real problem for our country,” Kerry argued, “is not the short-term debt… It’s the structural debt of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid measured against the demographics of our nation.”

“This is the essence of deficit hawk Pete Peterson’s argument and is establishment nonsense,” said Borosage. “Yes, as every projection shows, we have a long term debt problem. It is entirely a question of our broken health care system. Its soaring costs will bankrupt everything – families, businesses, state and federal governments – unless they are brought under control. That requires not cutting Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid, which simply transfers those out of control costs to the most vulnerable and least able to pay. That requires taking on the drug and insurance companies, the private hospital complexes, the way we deliver medicine that leaves us with a system that costs nearly twice per capita of every other industrial system and delivers worse results.”

Kerry goes on to say that a growth plan requires “Number one, we’ve got to deal with this debt and deficit, send Wall Street and the marketplace a message that the United States of America is deadly serious about dealing with this long term structural deficit…”

Borosage said, “Dealing with the debt and deficit in the midst of the recession, with Europe sinking and the recovery stalled is a recipe for a renewed decline. Look at Britain, with riots on the streets. At Greece, with demonstrations through the country. Austerity bites. It costs jobs; it exacts pain on an economy already sick. It is like bleeding a patient already weak from loss of blood.

“Kerry’s appointment will alarm, not appease liberals,” Borosage said, “for he is the most dangerous of politicians: someone who doesn’t understand what he doesn’t understand.”

Borosage said that Senator Patty Murray, the head of the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee. This has led good government groups to protest that her interests in fund-raising will skew her positions on taxes and military spending (reinforced by being from Washington once the headquarters of Boeing). It has led Republicans to call for her to be withdrawn as too political.

“A little political sense would be a good thing for Democrats on the committee,” said Borosage. “Americans, by overwhelming majorities, want Social Security and Medicare protected. And they favor tax increases on the rich and closing of corporate tax havens as the first step in getting deficits under control. Democrats with a sense of social decency or a sense of self-preservation would be wise to stand with that majority. That opinion represents both good policy and good politics – something Tea Party Republicans scorn and Democrats would be wise to defend.”

The Campaign for America's Future (CAF) is a center for ideas and action that works to build an enduring majority for progressive change. The Campaign advances a progressive economic agenda and a vision of the future that works for the many, not simply the few. The Campaign is leading the fight for America's priorities - for good jobs and a sustainable economy, and for strengthening the safety net.

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